Here's the song Trump University sales people were instructed to play during seminars

Hundreds of pages of Trump University internal documents
were released on Tuesday in connection with an ongoing fraud
lawsuit against the presumptive Republican presidential
nominee's now defunct series of courses on real estate and
investing.

The unsealed documents include sales and marketing
"playbooks" from 2007 through 2010. Politico, however,
published the 2010 playbook
in March.

One of the playbooks informed sales people that the last
song played before an instructional video in a seminar
"should be the Apprentice Theme Song: For the Love of
Money by the O’Jays.”

The seminar referenced was a free 90-minute presentation
open to the public called "Fast Track to Foreclosure."

The seminar, which aimed to drum-up interest for Trump University
courses, discussed "the current trends of the real estate market
and ways to still make money."

Sales people were advised to watch the body language of the
audience members during the presentation to identify which
viewers were "most likely to buy," encourage them to join,
and then collect payment.

"Full payment of $1,495 must be collected before paperwork is
submitted to Trump U," the playbook reads.

The documents were unsealed as part of a court
decision by Judge Gonzalo Curiel, whom
Trump has called a "hater" and suggested his Mexican heritage
made him biased and unfit to oversee the case.

Before the documents were released on Tuesday, New York
Attorney General Eric Schneiderman slammed Donald Trump and his
eponymous Trump University as
"phony" and "shameless."

Trump remains enmeshed in multiple lawsuits filed by former
students of Trump University and
faces a third fraud suit from Schneiderman, which likely
won't go to trial until after the November election. The suits
accuse Trump of defrauding students into paying thousands of
dollars for worthless classes on real estate and investing.

Trump and his lawyers, however, have continually defended the
for-profit university, citing stellar student reviews. Some
students, however, may have been pressured into writing them,
according to
The New York Times.